Page 304 - 1984
P. 304

Chapter 2






           e was lying on something that felt like a camp bed, ex-
       Hcept that it was higher off the ground and that he was
       fixed down in some way so that he could not move. Light
       that  seemed  stronger  than  usual  was  falling  on  his  face.
       O’Brien was standing at his side, looking down at him in-
       tently. At the other side of him stood a man in a white coat,
       holding a hypodermic syringe.
          Even after his eyes were open he took in his surround-
       ings only gradually. He had the impression of swimming up
       into this room from some quite different world, a sort of un-
       derwater world far beneath it. How long he had been down
       there he did not know. Since the moment when they arrest-
       ed him he had not seen darkness or daylight. Besides, his
       memories were not continuous. There had been times when
       consciousness, even the sort of consciousness that one has
       in sleep, had stopped dead and started again after a blank
       interval. But whether the intervals were of days or weeks or
       only seconds, there was no way of knowing.
          With  that  first  blow  on  the  elbow  the  nightmare  had
       started. Later he was to realize that all that then happened
       was merely a preliminary, a routine interrogation to which
       nearly all prisoners were subjected. There was a long range
       of crimes—espionage, sabotage, and the like—to which ev-
       eryone had to confess as a matter of course. The confession

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